Punch, or the London Charivari, Volume 152, May 16, 1917 by Various
page 24 of 52 (46%)
page 24 of 52 (46%)
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Minuets for a jewelled king,
And radiant gallants bowed sedately To lovely Pompadours curtseying. Pigeons cooed in its dovecots shady; Down in the rose-walk fountains played; Many a lovelorn lord and lady Here in the moonlight sighed and strayed; Here was beauty and love and laughter, Splendour and eminence bravely won; But now two walls and a blackened rafter Grimly tell the tale of the Hun. My lady's chamber is dust and ashes; The painted salons are charred with fire; The dovecot pitted with shrapnel splashes, The park a tangle of trench and wire; Shell-holes yawn in the ferns and mosses; Stripped and torn is the avenue; Down in the rose-walk humble crosses Grow where my lady's roses grew. Yet in the haunted midnight hours, When star-shells droop through the shattered trees, Steal they back to their ancient bowers, Beau Brocade and his Belle Marquise? Greatly loving and greatly daring-- Fancy, perhaps, but the fancy grips, _For a junior subaltern woke up swearing That a gracious lady had kissed his lips._ |
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